Free Self-Directed Solo 401k!!!

You heard it right: a FREE Solo 401k from Nabers Group. This is a contest, and you have a good chance of winning. I estimate that 98% of my readers will not even try to win. It’s a phenomenon: people think “Oh too many others will enter the contest and my odds won’t be good” and that leaves you will excellent odds if you enter the contest. Here’s what you have to do:

  1. Be eligible for a Solo 401k in the first place. This means that you have to have self employment activity (such as Schedule C income on your 1040 or own a business), and you have to have no employees at any businesses in which you or your spouse have significant ownership. (An “employee” is somebody who works over 1000 hours per year for your business and receives a W-2).
  2. Add me on Facebook. Go to my Facebook profile to add me to your friends. If you don’t have a Facebook account, just create one. It’s very simple and easy, and it will help you stay connected for updates, news, events, etc.
  3. Write a brief explanation of the most powerful business or investment opportunities in our current recession. Explain the “how” and the “why” as much as you can, but be direct and to the point at the same time. Submit it in a comment on this blog post (the one you’re currently reading) OR post it to the “wall” at the bottom of the Facebook Solo 401k Contest page. I’ll review all entries, and the person with the best idea will get a Solo 401k setup for them by Nabers Group with the entire establishment fee waived.

Submission Deadline: March 15, 2009

Value: $210,585

The math: Over the past 10 years, most stock indexes have produced a return of approximately 0%. With a Self-Directed Solo 401(k) plan, the accountholder can buy real estate, gold, stock in private companies, and loan money to individuals or corporations. Surveys have shown us that over 80% of our Solo 401(k) clients have a target return of investment of 12% per year or more. An investor with $100,000 of existing funds who earns 12% per year for 10 years will generate a profit of $210,585.

We’ve never done this before, and I don’t know if we will ever do this again. Now’s your chance – start working on your entry today!

* The value is based on the potential profit you could earn and will vary based on your investment decisions. With a Self-Directed Solo 401(k), it’s up to you to find and choose investments, and only you will decide how profitable and valuable this investment vehicle will be.

We’ve never done this before, and I don’t know if we will ever do this again. Now’s your chance – start working on your entry today!

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Weak economy strengthens the incentive for a Solo 401k

This is quite a simple concept so this post will be very brief.

  • Our weak economy has brought very high inflation: as high as 13% over the past year.
  • Future dollars are worth much less than dollars today.
  • With a Solo 401k you can make tax-deductible contributions to your retirement plan in today’s dollars and pay taxes later in less valuable dollars.
  • Successful entrepreneurs and self employed individuals can contribute $49,000 per year or more to their Solo 401k in 2009.

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3 Reasons why today is the best time in human history for immense personal wealth and freedom

While there are many people finding themselves more fearful than ever, there are others who are more excited than ever. Here’s why…

  1. The rules of safety and courage have changed. Since the industrial revolution, employee-ism has surged. During this time, getting a job to work for somebody else was the safe thing to do. On the other side of the coin the risky, courageous act of working for oneself is what brings riches. As a result, each person has been faced with a choice to pursue either safety or riches. Part of what made employee-ism the safe bet for an individual is the stability of companies as well as what has become the largest store of non-real estate wealth in our country: holdings in the stock market. This year we have seen the rules of the game permanently changed. Our financial system is crashing, and trustworthiness has evaporated from corporate America and the financial services industry. Now working for yourself is no longer the courageous thing to do; it’s the safe thing to do.
  2. Technology has brought immense power to everybody. Personal computers and the internet are now available to just about everyone. This has made some very expensive things become cheap or free. This has made it possible to do things that were previously impossible. There is no longer a need for every transaction to take place in a physical location. Needs and desires are able to be fulfilled online. In many circumstances, the large corporation cannot compete with the one-man shop. Today a person can start and run several businesses for little or no money. Taking something and creating or increasing its value has never been more accessible.
  3. Arbitrage has never been [Read more...]

Nabers Group Solo 401k vs. Custodian Solo 401k

solok_custodian_scale

After being asked “What’s the difference between your Solo 401(k) and one offered by a custodian?” for the umpteenth time in the past few months, I figured it’s about time to write a post about it.

Why custodians exist

IRAs are governed by section 408 of the Internal Revenue Code.  There they are defined as a retirement savings account trust where the trustee is a bank or a trust company (a trust company is basically a bank that holds assets but doesn’t make loans). This role is often referred to as custodian. Self directed IRAs have been in use for decades, and so self directed IRA custodians have been around for decades as well. For IRAs, there is no choice… you must hire a custodian to serve as trustee to your IRA.

The trustee role of a self directed IRA

The term “custodian” comes about in IRC Section 408 because when a bank or trust company serves the trustee role, they are not being trustee in the traditional sense. Usually the trustee of a trust makes decisions and has discretion over handling the income and assets of that trust. With an IRA, this normally isn’t the case. The bank or trust company is not making decisions or providing any other services other than custody (holding assets as an intermediary), and that’s why they are usually referred to as “custodian” – because they don’t provide any services other than custody.

Solo 401(k) is not required to have a custodian

Internal Revenue Code Section 401, which governs all 401(k) plans, does not issue any restrictions on who can serve as trustee. Not too many people have figured this out yet because the self directed Solo 401k wasn’t available until 2006. The benefits of a Solo 401k (such as higher contribution limits and reduced administrative requirements) come from the fact that you can play multiple roles. You can make higher contributions by serving the roles of employee/participant and employer. But it doesn’t stop there. The participant can also serve as administrator and trustee.

The role of administrator for a Solo 401k

An administrator simply keeps records. For a self directed Solo 401(k), a diligent investor is already keeping the records that an administrator would. These include bank statements, brokerage statements, copies of real estate purchase contracts and leases, and generally whatever paperwork accompanies a transaction of the plan. Since the self directed investor should already keep these records, it isn’t necessary or beneficial to hire another company to also keep the same records. Hiring an administrator for a self directed Solo 401k simply introduces unnecessary, undesirable fees.

The role of trustee for a Solo 401k

The trustee is simply the person or company who handles the transactions of the Solo 401k trust. As an investor, if you were to hire a custodian, [Read more...]

Who is eligible for a Solo 401k?

Solo 401k eligibility requires 2 things:

  1. Presence of self employment activity – This can be as a sole proprietor or more formally organized as a Corporation, Partnership, or LLC. It’s okay to also be employed elsewhere even if that is your full time job and you participate in a 401k there.
  2. Absence of full time employees – To meet this requirement you cannot have full time employees at a business that you own. Part time employees (those who work under 1000 hours per year) and independent contractors (those who receive a 1099 rather than a W-2 at the end of the year) are okay to employ.

If you meet this requirement, you are likely to qualify for a Solo 401k. For a free consultation, call us at 877-SOLO-401K.

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Arkansas Couple Realizes the Benefit of Managing their Own Retirement Accounts

Stoddards

The stock market implosion of 2008 has millions of Americans feeling financially helpless.  Yet individuals who are investing their 401k & IRA money in ventures outside the stock market are singing a different tune. Janice and Jack Stoddard, real estate professionals in Arkansas, heard about self directed investing from a seminar that taught how to invest IRA money into real estate.

Energized by the idea, the Stoddards established two IRAs, rolling over money from their traditional IRAs to fund them.  They used the IRAs to make small real estate transactions, purchasing and reselling property at a profit with all proceeds staying in the IRA.

In 2006, an opportunity to buy and then immediately re-sell 60 acres of undeveloped land at a profit came up.  Concerns over structuring the deal and keeping everything above board led the Stoddards to consult with us at Nabers Group.

“Jeff helped us establish a Solo 401k that could be used to handle the 60 acre transaction. The Solo 401k was a key component to our funding because we were able to contribute 10 times more to it than we could to an IRA.  Meanwhile, our son, who works in oil and gas, alerted us to keeping our eyes open for property with mineral rights for future transactions,” Janice says.

With the proceeds from the 60 acre sale, the Stoddards began [Read more...]

Announcing the new Solo401k.com!

Escape to financial freedom

We’ve just relaunched solo401k.com on this blogging platform to allow for regular information updates and easy navigation.  Use the categories at the bottom of the page to learn more about the world’s most powerful investment vehicle – the Solo 401k!

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